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DUKAS_185135409_NUR
Jewish Quarter In Prague
People queue and gather in front of a kosher-certified trdelnik and coffee stand offering Jewish-style desserts and drinks in the Jewish Quarter of Prague, Czech Republic, on May 11, 2025. The shop serves traditional chimney cakes adapted to kosher dietary laws and highlights Jewish culinary presence in a popular tourist area. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_184534920_NUR
India Daily Life
A shopkeeper sets a 5 kg cake in a city cake shop in Kolkata, India, on May 10, 2025. The cake includes replicas of the S400 air defense system and Rafale fighter jet. It is made in honor of the Indian armed forces and to commemorate the success of ''Operation Sindoor.'' The escalation between the nuclear-armed rivals follows an attack on tourists in the Indian-run part of disputed Kashmir that kills 26 people on April 22 and Indian airstrikes on ''terrorist camps'' on May 7. (Photo by Debajyoti Chakraborty/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_184524259_NUR
Daily Life In India
A baker in Kolkata, India, on May 10, 2025, stands in front of a custom cake with replicas of the S600 air defense system on top. The cake is made in honor of the Indian Armed Forces and to commemorate the success of ''Operation Sindoor,'' which the Indian Armed Forces launched against the terrorist occupation in POK and Pakistan as retaliation against the terror attacks in Kashmir that claimed the lives of 26 civilians. (Photo by Debarchan Chatterjee/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_184368286_NUR
Rischart Headquarters Bakery On Marienplatz In Munich
A large number of people gather in front of the Rischart bakery branch at Marienplatz 18, with others descending the escalator into the U-Bahn station below, in Munich, Bavaria, Upper Bavaria, Germany, on May 3, 2025. This flagship location of Max Rischart's Backhaus KG is the busiest bakery branch in Germany and also serves as the company's headquarters. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_184368277_NUR
Rischart Headquarters Bakery On Marienplatz In Munich
People queue in front of the Rischart bakery at Marienplatz 18 in Munich, Germany, on May 3, 2025. This flagship branch of Max Rischart's Backhaus KG is the most frequented bakery location in Germany and also serves as the company's headquarters. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
DUK10163103_022
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_017
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_011
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_024
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_008
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_021
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_010
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_028
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_027
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_001
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_004
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_003
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_031
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_030
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_025
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_026
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_002
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_007
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_029
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_032
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_033
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_015
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_020
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_012
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_019
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_016
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_023
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_013
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_006
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_005
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_014
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_018
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163103_009
Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: Italienische und Schweizer Wissenschaftler und Köche kreieren eine durch den EU RoboFood Finanzfond geförderte vollständig essbare KI Hochzeitstorte
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Scientists and chefs from Switzerland and Italy have built a robotic wedding cake you can eat in its entireity.
As part of the EU-funded RoboFood project, researchers from EPFL in Switzerland and Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) teamed up with pastry chefs and food scientists from the EHL hospitality school in Lausanne to create an incredible feat of robotics and gastronomy.
Their creation, the RoboCake, is being showcased at Expo 2025 in Osaka.
“Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” explains Professor Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project. “However, merging them offers many advantages, particularly in terms of limiting electronic waste and food waste.” Scientists are also exploring applications in emergency nutrition and healthcare.
“Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals, or even to monitor food freshness using sensors that can be consumed.”
At the heart of the project is the RoboCake – a robotic wedding cake showcasing the potential of this emerging field.
It features two fully edible robotic teddy bears, developed by EPFL’s LIS.
“They are made from gelatin, syrup and colourants,” says Bokeon Kwak, a researcher at LIS. “They are animated by an internal pneumatic system: when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move.”
The bears, which move and dance on the cake, have a flavour described as soft, sweet pomegranate gummies.
IIT researchers led by Dr Mario Caironi have developed the world’s first edible rechargeable battery, crafted from vitamin B2, quercetin, activated carbon – and chocolate. “These batteries, safe for consumption, can be used to light the LED candles on the cake,” says Valerio Gall *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_182609162_NUR
Economy And Business In Venice, Italy
Cannoli pastries in a shop in Venice, Italy on March 14th, 2025. (Photo by Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto) -
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Pamela Anderson sur le plateau de l'émission "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" à Los Angeles
Pictures MUST credit: CBS Former Baywatch actress Pamela Anderson showed off her new minimal make-up style when she appeared on TV to plug her new cook book. Pamela, 57, is vegan and lives on Vancouver Island in Canada where she grows her own food. The star, whose father is from Finland, appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the USA and introduced him to one of the country’s delicacies, called visiting cake. It is served up when guests come around for an informal evening Talking about her home onVancouver Island, she said :”I love it. My little vegetable farm is kind of what inspired the book. “ Asked what made her write her cook book, titled ”I Love You: Recipes From The Heart.” She replied that she gave her two sons Brandon and Dylan by ex-husband Tommy Lee, a recipe box for a housewarming gift and I engraved the box “I love you." Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
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Pamela Anderson sur le plateau de l'émission "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" à Los Angeles
Pictures MUST credit: CBS Former Baywatch actress Pamela Anderson showed off her new minimal make-up style when she appeared on TV to plug her new cook book. Pamela, 57, is vegan and lives on Vancouver Island in Canada where she grows her own food. The star, whose father is from Finland, appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the USA and introduced him to one of the country’s delicacies, called visiting cake. It is served up when guests come around for an informal evening Talking about her home onVancouver Island, she said :”I love it. My little vegetable farm is kind of what inspired the book. “ Asked what made her write her cook book, titled ”I Love You: Recipes From The Heart.” She replied that she gave her two sons Brandon and Dylan by ex-husband Tommy Lee, a recipe box for a housewarming gift and I engraved the box “I love you." Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_176280224_BES
Pamela Anderson sur le plateau de l'émission "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" à Los Angeles
Pictures MUST credit: CBS Former Baywatch actress Pamela Anderson showed off her new minimal make-up style when she appeared on TV to plug her new cook book. Pamela, 57, is vegan and lives on Vancouver Island in Canada where she grows her own food. The star, whose father is from Finland, appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the USA and introduced him to one of the country’s delicacies, called visiting cake. It is served up when guests come around for an informal evening Talking about her home onVancouver Island, she said :”I love it. My little vegetable farm is kind of what inspired the book. “ Asked what made her write her cook book, titled ”I Love You: Recipes From The Heart.” She replied that she gave her two sons Brandon and Dylan by ex-husband Tommy Lee, a recipe box for a housewarming gift and I engraved the box “I love you." Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_176280223_BES
Pamela Anderson sur le plateau de l'émission "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" à Los Angeles
Pictures MUST credit: CBS Former Baywatch actress Pamela Anderson showed off her new minimal make-up style when she appeared on TV to plug her new cook book. Pamela, 57, is vegan and lives on Vancouver Island in Canada where she grows her own food. The star, whose father is from Finland, appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the USA and introduced him to one of the country’s delicacies, called visiting cake. It is served up when guests come around for an informal evening Talking about her home onVancouver Island, she said :”I love it. My little vegetable farm is kind of what inspired the book. “ Asked what made her write her cook book, titled ”I Love You: Recipes From The Heart.” She replied that she gave her two sons Brandon and Dylan by ex-husband Tommy Lee, a recipe box for a housewarming gift and I engraved the box “I love you." Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_176280222_BES
Pamela Anderson sur le plateau de l'émission "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" à Los Angeles
Pictures MUST credit: CBS Former Baywatch actress Pamela Anderson showed off her new minimal make-up style when she appeared on TV to plug her new cook book. Pamela, 57, is vegan and lives on Vancouver Island in Canada where she grows her own food. The star, whose father is from Finland, appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the USA and introduced him to one of the country’s delicacies, called visiting cake. It is served up when guests come around for an informal evening Talking about her home onVancouver Island, she said :”I love it. My little vegetable farm is kind of what inspired the book. “ Asked what made her write her cook book, titled ”I Love You: Recipes From The Heart.” She replied that she gave her two sons Brandon and Dylan by ex-husband Tommy Lee, a recipe box for a housewarming gift and I engraved the box “I love you." Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_176280221_BES
Pamela Anderson sur le plateau de l'émission "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" à Los Angeles
Pictures MUST credit: CBS Former Baywatch actress Pamela Anderson showed off her new minimal make-up style when she appeared on TV to plug her new cook book. Pamela, 57, is vegan and lives on Vancouver Island in Canada where she grows her own food. The star, whose father is from Finland, appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the USA and introduced him to one of the country’s delicacies, called visiting cake. It is served up when guests come around for an informal evening Talking about her home onVancouver Island, she said :”I love it. My little vegetable farm is kind of what inspired the book. “ Asked what made her write her cook book, titled ”I Love You: Recipes From The Heart.” She replied that she gave her two sons Brandon and Dylan by ex-husband Tommy Lee, a recipe box for a housewarming gift and I engraved the box “I love you." Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_176280220_BES
Pamela Anderson sur le plateau de l'émission "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" à Los Angeles
Pictures MUST credit: CBS Former Baywatch actress Pamela Anderson showed off her new minimal make-up style when she appeared on TV to plug her new cook book. Pamela, 57, is vegan and lives on Vancouver Island in Canada where she grows her own food. The star, whose father is from Finland, appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the USA and introduced him to one of the country’s delicacies, called visiting cake. It is served up when guests come around for an informal evening Talking about her home onVancouver Island, she said :”I love it. My little vegetable farm is kind of what inspired the book. “ Asked what made her write her cook book, titled ”I Love You: Recipes From The Heart.” She replied that she gave her two sons Brandon and Dylan by ex-husband Tommy Lee, a recipe box for a housewarming gift and I engraved the box “I love you." Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_176280219_BES
Pamela Anderson sur le plateau de l'émission "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" à Los Angeles
Pictures MUST credit: CBS Former Baywatch actress Pamela Anderson showed off her new minimal make-up style when she appeared on TV to plug her new cook book. Pamela, 57, is vegan and lives on Vancouver Island in Canada where she grows her own food. The star, whose father is from Finland, appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the USA and introduced him to one of the country’s delicacies, called visiting cake. It is served up when guests come around for an informal evening Talking about her home onVancouver Island, she said :”I love it. My little vegetable farm is kind of what inspired the book. “ Asked what made her write her cook book, titled ”I Love You: Recipes From The Heart.” She replied that she gave her two sons Brandon and Dylan by ex-husband Tommy Lee, a recipe box for a housewarming gift and I engraved the box “I love you." Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_176280218_BES
Pamela Anderson sur le plateau de l'émission "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" à Los Angeles
Pictures MUST credit: CBS Former Baywatch actress Pamela Anderson showed off her new minimal make-up style when she appeared on TV to plug her new cook book. Pamela, 57, is vegan and lives on Vancouver Island in Canada where she grows her own food. The star, whose father is from Finland, appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the USA and introduced him to one of the country’s delicacies, called visiting cake. It is served up when guests come around for an informal evening Talking about her home onVancouver Island, she said :”I love it. My little vegetable farm is kind of what inspired the book. “ Asked what made her write her cook book, titled ”I Love You: Recipes From The Heart.” She replied that she gave her two sons Brandon and Dylan by ex-husband Tommy Lee, a recipe box for a housewarming gift and I engraved the box “I love you." Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_176280217_BES
Pamela Anderson sur le plateau de l'émission "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" à Los Angeles
Pictures MUST credit: CBS Former Baywatch actress Pamela Anderson showed off her new minimal make-up style when she appeared on TV to plug her new cook book. Pamela, 57, is vegan and lives on Vancouver Island in Canada where she grows her own food. The star, whose father is from Finland, appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the USA and introduced him to one of the country’s delicacies, called visiting cake. It is served up when guests come around for an informal evening Talking about her home onVancouver Island, she said :”I love it. My little vegetable farm is kind of what inspired the book. “ Asked what made her write her cook book, titled ”I Love You: Recipes From The Heart.” She replied that she gave her two sons Brandon and Dylan by ex-husband Tommy Lee, a recipe box for a housewarming gift and I engraved the box “I love you." Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_176280216_BES
Pamela Anderson sur le plateau de l'émission "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" à Los Angeles
Pictures MUST credit: CBS Former Baywatch actress Pamela Anderson showed off her new minimal make-up style when she appeared on TV to plug her new cook book. Pamela, 57, is vegan and lives on Vancouver Island in Canada where she grows her own food. The star, whose father is from Finland, appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the USA and introduced him to one of the country’s delicacies, called visiting cake. It is served up when guests come around for an informal evening Talking about her home onVancouver Island, she said :”I love it. My little vegetable farm is kind of what inspired the book. “ Asked what made her write her cook book, titled ”I Love You: Recipes From The Heart.” She replied that she gave her two sons Brandon and Dylan by ex-husband Tommy Lee, a recipe box for a housewarming gift and I engraved the box “I love you." Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage